The Intellectual Father of Romanticism Was
- The intellectual father of Romanticism was
- Voltaire.
- Rousseau.
- Mazzini.
- Fourier.
- Louis Blanc.
- The romantics
- Saw themselves as the heirs of the Enlightenment.
- Were rarely involved in politics.
- Generally opposed nationalism.
- Disdained popular culture and music.
- Often wrote about medieval legends and heroes.
- The Greeks were able to win their independence from the Ottoman Empire because
- Austria supported their cause to weaken an old enemy.
- Britain and France put pressure on the Ottoman Empire on behalf of the Greeks.
- Russia agreed to stay neutral in the Greek-Ottoman conflict.
- Prussia helped them in order to maintain the balance of power in the Balkans.
- Romania, which was already independent, supported them.
- The Congress of Vienna
- Punished France severely for forcing Europe into war for twenty years.
- In order to keep things stable, kept the kings Napoleon had appointed on the throne.
- Awarded England important provinces on the European continent.
- Gave additional lands to Prussia.
- Restored Poland as a fully independent state.
- The restored Bourbon king Louis XVIII
- Executed the revolutionaries who had executed Louis XVI.
- Tried to restore absolute monarchy.
- Helped preserve constitutional monarchy for France.
- Really had very little power.
- Modified the constitution to give all adult men the vote.
- The chief demand in the 1830 revolution in France was for
- Greater political democracy.
- National workshops.
- The end of the war against Algerian rebels.
- A republic.
- The end of slavery in the French colonies.
- In 1848, socialistic demands were most important in the revolutions in
- England.
- France.
- Prussia.
- Austria.
- Hungary.
- The repeal of the Corn Laws in Britain in 1846
- Was enacted by the Tories to help the landowning class.
- Reflected the changes in Parliament since the Great Reform Bill.
- Ended free trade.
- Was opposed by the working classes.
- Caused the famine in Ireland.
- The Frankfurt Assembly failed because the delegates
- Could not agree on what to do about Schleswig –Holstein.
- Offered the crown to the king of Bavaria.
- Were not supported by the middle classes.
- Tried to write a constitution from Prussia.
- Failed to convince the king of Prussia to accept the crown
- The “June Days” in France in 1848 refers to
- The election of Louis Napoleon.
- Fighting between workers and the army in Paris.
- Riots that took place when Louis Blanc was given a position in the Provisional Government.
- Fighting between liberals and monarchists in Paris.
- The period when Louis Philippe abdicated.
- The Hungarian Revolution of 1848 ended when
- Metternich fled.
- Franz Joseph became the new emperor.
- Russian troops were sent to Budapest.
- The Hungarians voluntarily rejoined the Austrian Empire to avoid further bloodshed.
- The Austrian crown was given to a Hungarian for the first time.
- The revolutions of 1848 in Berlin and Vienna were similar in that in both
- The chief issue was nationalistic agitation by minorities.
- Both were crushed within two weeks.
- Nothing really happened.
- The rulers promised liberal constitutions but then reneged on their promises.
- The Russians helped defeat the revolutionaries.
- Which is not a key point of Marxism?
- Workers are inevitably exploited by their employers.
- History is fundamentally about class struggle.
- The proletariat can win over the bourgeoisie only with their leaders who have been workers.
- The value of any object is determined by the labor that went into making it.
- The bourgeoisie has been a revolutionary class.
- Which of the following would Marx and Engels agree with most in their views of economics?
- Fourier
- Proudhon
- Saint-Simon
- Michelet
- George Sand